“This is the first time I’ve seen you look ugly, and that makes me happy!”

=======================================================

At first when I heard of Bridesmaids, I thought it was like The Hangover, but with a women group instead. While both movies happen before weddings, they should not be grouped in the same party. Bridesmaids far outclasses The Hangover in terms of story and comedy. With The Hangover Part II, I had a hard time trying to find myself laughing at the various situations; however, with Bridesmaids, it was a completely different experience at the theaters – laughter came automatically and constantly.

A cheap workout

Now with comedy movies, the main concern is the humor, not the story. However, Bridesmaids has a decent story and Kristen Wiig makes for an interesting main character. Her random acts of being drunk and jealous create hilarious scenes of a bridesmaid gone wrong. The other actresses pulled their parts as well, such as Wendi McLendon-Covey and Ellie Kemper who had some of the best lines in the movie.

A very hilarious scene

The main fault of the movie is the romance – while not terrible, I found the romance to be the most boring part. Every time the male love interest came on screen, I knew the “fun” was over. I feel the film would have been better if it focused more on the girls’ problems together than on the love problem. But if they were to do that, then it’d be more like The Hangover, so I guess it is alright how it is. Overall, Bridesmaids is a film that you should not miss, especially if you enjoy comedies. People who give the movie a low rating do not understand comedy. Seriously, this is the funniest movie of the year, perhaps even the funniest movie from the past five years.

“My son saved China – you, too, can save! Buy one dumpling, get one free!”

=======================================================

Kung Fu Panda 2 is the other sequel that came out on May 26 (along with The Hangover Part II). The main difference between the two is that Kung Fu Panda 2 acts like a proper sequel – it builds from the previous movie and presents a new challenge while getting deeper into the development of the characters. Through the conflict, Po (Jack Black) ends up learning about his past and his real family.

The panda returns!

While the story is a bit cliche (defeat the enemy who is jeopardizing lives and kung fu), the action makes up plenty for it. Considering it is an animated movie based around kung fu, you can’t expect anything less. Po and the Furious Five bust out some interesting and new moves.

The gang's all here

The film does have a touchy side to it when Po’s past is shown of how he came to be Mr. Ping’s (James Hong) son. When Po as a baby panda was shown, a wave of “awww” traveled across the theater. Along with James Hong, plenty of other famous actors took part in the making of Kung Fu Panda 2, including returning voice actors, Angelina Jolie, Dustin Hoffman, Jackie Chan, and Seth Rogen, along with new additions such as Gary Oldman, who voices Shen, the evil Peacock. Gary Oldman surprises me considering all the various roles he has taken, like Sirius Black from the Harry Potter series and Jim Gordon from the recent Batman trilogy. He reminds me a bit of one of my favorite actors, Hugo Weaving, who has had unique roles in The Matrix, Lord of the Rings, and Transformer series as well as his performance as V. Apparently he is The Red Skull in the new Captain America movie and is returning as Elrond in the new Hobbits movies.

Awww

Hugo Weaving aside, Kung Fu Panda 2 is as good as it gets when it comes to a family, action movie. The ending of the film, however, is very similar to the whole idea of Shaolin Soccer, but I guess that comes with the kung fu territory. Even though the movie has an obvious plot, it is still a good watch, especially for children and families. My only concern for this series now is that DreamWorks will commit and overkill and release three more sequels later on (like how they did for Shrek).

7.8

Quoted by MWP

Sawazz – I thought the action and comedy were great, above average, but the ending feels like such a rip-off of Stephen Chow’s Shaolin Soccer! – 7.6